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Innovation in the Arts: The Search Continues

Adam Lyon
/
Creative Commons

It's hard to imagine: the idea that the arts, the grand bastion of our creative genius, may soon be bankrupt. But are new ideas really an unlimited commodity, or wont we one day exhaust them all? Some say we already have; that the bulk of what's being churned out by today's filmmakers, musicians and writers, are simply re-imaginings of the ideas of their predecessors.

And it's a hard point to argue. Year after year we see old movies being re-made, classic songs being re-released, and canonic works of literature being adapted to modern times. One could surely be forgiven for thinking the last great innovators of art have long since hung up their hats.

But some remain optimistic. They see the emergence of original art as an ebbing and flowing cycle, an ongoing process prone to the same booms and busts as our economy that inevitably will yield new forms. Indeed they see no limits to the landscapes of our imagination. In this show we'll talk with those on both sides in an effort to figure out the fate of our creative future.

Please leave comments below, email us at colin@wnpr.org, or tweet us @wnprcolin.

GUESTS:

SONGS:

  Colin McEnroe and Chion Wolf contributed to this show.

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